Possible Problems With Lethal Injection Drugs Stop Tennessee Execution
Meanwhile in South Carolina, the state Supreme Court delays a planned execution by firing squad.

A scheduled execution in Tennessee Thursday night was put on temporary hold by the governor, but it's not entirely clear why.
Oscar Franklin Smith, 72, was scheduled to be executed via lethal injection, but one hour before the deed was to be done, Gov. Bill Lee issued a temporary reprieve. A statement from the governor said that there was an "oversight in preparation for lethal injection," but didn't explain what the issues were.
The reprieve will last until the start of June.
The drugs states have been using to execute prisoners have become the source of controversy in recent years, particularly in Tennessee. Smith was actually scheduled to be executed back in 2020, but his lawyers filed a complaint over the three-drug cocktail they had planned to use. The cocktail would have stopped the prisoner's heart, but it was possible for him to remain conscious for several minutes and to feel searing pain in his veins. One of the drugs, midazolam, which is supposed to render the prisoner unconscious, has failed to work properly in some executions.
Smith's defense attorney, Kelley Henry, told The Tennessean that she believes the prison likely mishandled the execution drugs. She had requested that the Tennessee Department of Correction provide proof that the drugs had met all the appropriate testing standards but had not gotten a response prior to the governor's reprieve.
Smith was sentenced to death in 1990 after he was convicted of three counts of first-degree murder for killing his wife and her two teenage sons from another marriage. Smith has maintained his innocence throughout his imprisonment. He has been trying to get courts to consider whether new DNA evidence on one of the murder weapons—DNA that doesn't match his—could prove his innocence. But both the state's Supreme Court and the U.S. Supreme Court have rejected the effort.
Meanwhile, a rare execution by firing squad scheduled to happen next week has been temporarily put on hold by South Carolina's Supreme Court. Death row inmate Richard Moore had been scheduled to be put to death on April 29. Because of the aforementioned issues with lethal injection cocktails, South Carolina changed its execution methods in 2021 to either the electric chair or firing squad.
Moore is fighting the execution, his attorneys arguing that the state cannot retroactively change the method of execution on him. On Wednesday the South Carolina Supreme Court put out a brief order giving Moore a temporary stay of execution. The order did not explain why but said an explanation of the order that would establish the parameters of the stay would soon follow.
Smith and Moore may have survived so far, but over in Texas, prisoner Carl Wayne Buntion was put to death last night via lethal injection. Buntion, 78, was Texas' oldest death-row inmate, sentenced for killing a Houston police officer in 1990. He was given a lethal dose of the sedative pentobarbital, and after a few last breaths, he was pronounced dead at 6:39 p.m.
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These problems could be solved by having every state implement the #1 item on the Koch / Soros / Reason soft-on-crime wishlist — the maximum penalty for any crime should be a 2 month sentence.
#FreeTheCriminals
#EmptyThePrisons
#CheapLaborAboveAll
Hmm. I feel mixed. Some people can die within 2 months and at that point it's indistinguishable from the death sentence or life in prison.
I am supposed to feel sorry for any pain this would cause the CRIMINAL, what kind of pain did the victim go through, who cares what pain the CRIMINAL gets.
check your sarc meter
Why not just make him touch some fentanyl?
Lol
Opiates are rock star drugs, and thus killing people that way is Cool and Unusual punishment.
ya funny
Seriously, helium inhalation is cheap painless and very effective. Why hasn't anyone even heard of it?
Nitrogen inhalation is even cheaper, and there's no indication when the gas has been introduced unlike helium.
You laugh, but:
https://deathpenaltyinfo.org/executions/lethal-injection/overview-of-lethal-injection-protocols
FENTANYL: Nebraska first used fentanyl in the August 14, 2018 execution of Carey Dean Moore. Nevada has also announced that it will use fentanyl in combination with other drugs to carry out executions.
George Floyd executed himself?
I am supposed to feel sorry for any pain this would cause the CRIMINAL, what kind of pain did the victim go through, who cares what pain the CRIMINAL gets.
The three drug cocktail is the perfect design to torture someone to death in plain view of everyone.
1. Replace painkiller with water.
2. Paralysis drug keeps the person from showing outward signs of pain.
3. Drug that kills you with excruciating pain absent painkiller.
Buntion, 78, was Texas' oldest death-row inmate, sentenced for killing a Houston police officer in 1990.
Poor guy, only got to live 32 years longer.
A scheduled execution in Tennessee Thursday night was put on temporary hold by the governor, but it's not entirely clear why.
He was unvaxxed.
Needs his 2nd booster first.
I'm not a huge death penalty fan, I don't trust our justice system to reliably and fairly decide who deserves death.
That being said, I just don't get the problem with the drug cocktails. I've had to euthanize a number of pets. It's fast, painless, and quite peaceful. The vet works a syringe, the pet closes their eyes, and in seconds, it's all over but the sobbing. I don't see why the same proven technique can't be used for a human execution.
The manufacturers of those drugs, and/or the countries in which they reside, refuse to permit them to be sold/exported for purposes of human execution.
Thanks, ya beat me to it; WHY can the vet do this, no sweat, but we can NOT get our shit straight with humans?
"Legal issues" and "the sellers won't sell", my ass!!! Government Almighty works all day and every day to work undercover to bust us for smoking, buying, or selling "weed", etc. WHY can NOT Government Almighty work undercover, pretending to be a bunch of veterinarians, buy this shit, and be DONE with it?
(I suspect it is because this way, we wouldn't be able to funnel butt-tons of $$$MONEY to FUCKING LAWYERS AND JUDGES to agonize over this shit, all day and every day!!!)
Then why would you trust it to reliably and fairly decide who deserves imprisonment? Or a stiff fine?
Simple solution: end the death penalty, convert all death row sentences to life in prison without parole. Problem solved.
But the state wants to kill some people.
I am against the death penalty. No state should have that power. But, as an aside; if they insist on performing this barbaric act why can't they simply use the same formulation that puts us under during surgery . . . just in a larger dose?
Sure, they could do that... Butt ONLY after $$$BILLIONS are spend on fat-cat judges and lawyers to study the "legal issues" involved!
It's not like Bubba from KY hasn't thought about it.
Long story short, the drug companies don't want to be involved in the death penalty and usually refuse to sell to states that use the drugs. (It is bad PR, ethically wrong, activists object etc.) A lot of people will refuse to go under using the drug they use to kill people, and anti-death penalty activists will make it known who is making those drugs.
Since the states can't really afford to have a showdown with the pharma companies they have to turn to the bottom shelf stuff to kill people. And shockingly, it doesn't work as well as the good stuff.
Note, I'm also against the death penalty. I just find the argument that lethal injection as cruel is disingenuous, when thousands of people go under every day and the tricky part is having them wake up.
And you wonder where people get the idea you care more about criminals than their victims.
This ain't that hard. The diazepines such as midazolam, are primarily anti-anxiety medications and take large doses to render a human comatose. Fentanyl is a synthetic opioid that is about 100X as strong as morphine; it works every time, is readily available and easy to use. What's the problem?
The problem is that lawyers and judges MUST make up shit to fight about, so as to get more $$$money!!!!!
I agree with readers who mention nitrogen, helium and surgical anesthetics. When left to governments something that should be quite simple becomes hopelessly complicated and expensive. Moreover, what do long term prisoners think about their "quality-of-life" ? Has anyone ever asked them? Media ? If they have no hope of freedom perhaps they would welcome a "peaceful exit".
This is an opportunity to celebrate a great Clarence Thomas 1 to 8 decision. In considering a stay of execution for John Ramirez, Thomas said that the petitioner was using strategies to prevent a lawful execution. There was more evidence of delay tactics than consistent religious practice. The law to prevent such manipulation applies. My hero, Clarence Thomas.
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